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The Byrds

THE BYRDS

YEAR

1991

INDUCTED BY

Don Henley (Eagles)

CATEGORY

Performers

The ever-evolving pioneers of rock and roll’s expansion into new, psychedelic sounds.

Hungry to push the boundaries of popular music, the Byrds made music so inventive that they needed new genres. Their lyrical insights and groundbreaking innovation yielded songs that spoke to the present while pushing toward the future.

Chris Hillman

Chris Hillman

David Crosby

David Crosby

Gene Clark

Gene Clark

Michael Clarke

Michael Clarke

Roger McGuinn

Roger McGuinn

HALL OF FAME
ESSAY

By Bud Scoppa

“It was Dylan meets the Beatles.”

That’s Roger McGuinn’s succinct explanation of the Byrds’ bold, brainy take on rock & roll. True enough: What the Byrds pulled off with 1965’s landmark Mr. Tambourine Man was a resonant synthesis of the Beatles’ charged pro forma precision and Dylan’s mythopoeic incantations.

It turned out to be a startlingly perfect fit, inspiring much that has followed, from their mentors’ subsequent Rubber Soul and Blonde On Blonde to the work of such disparate inheritors as Tom Petty, R.E.M., U2, and Crowded House.

Read More
Class of 1991
The ethereal, mystical sound of The Byrds washed over them, washed over an entire nation
Don Henley
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